Durocher drove to a Publix grocery store where she knew her husband, Jackson, would be dropping off his alleged mistress, Donishi Smith, at work, according to an incident report obtained by The Huffington Post. She told officers she knew the couple would be there because Smith had told her about the trip earlier that day.

Outside the grocery store, Durocher allegedly blocked her husband's car with her own, then, wielding a wine bottle, attempted to pull Smith out of the vehicle. When that didn't work, Durocher allegedly tried to hit Smith with the bottle. She missed, smashing the bottle against the car door, the report said.

Smith told police that Durocher then threw the remaining shards of the bottle at her, which resulted in a "scuffle" between the two women.

An officer noted that when police arrived, Smith was bleeding from one eye, with lacerations on her arms. Durocher had one laceration on her hand, but refused treatment.

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Unlikely Weapons

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From crystal balls to pickle jars, almost any object can become a weapon if used (in)correctly.
Read on to learn about some of the more unusual items that have been used for violent means
WARNING: Graphic Images

Konstantine Myakush was struck in the neck with an errant arrow in a Moscow park on April 30, 2012. Myakush -- who was out with his two daughters -- miraculously survived the brush with death and is expected to make a full recovery. Doctors said he was fortunate because the arrow didn't strike a major artery.

In April 2012, Clara Ann Blocker, of Oklahoma City, was sentenced to life in prison for beating a dwarf to death with a crystal ball.
Blocker, 41, was drinking with Erik Scott Saxton on September 16, 2010, when the two got into an argument. Blocker grabbed a nearby crystal ball to bludgeon Saxton in the head before also beating him with a DVD player. Though Blocker initially claimed she never would have hurt the 4-foot 5-inch Saxton, "because he's a little person," she ultimately pleaded guilty to his murder.

On April 25, 2012, Lisa Anderson violated the penal law.
When police showed up at Anderson's apartment in Watertown, New York, on complaint of an "unwanted person" in the home, Anderson allegedly threw a pink dildo at the face of Officer Jonathan Pitts. The sex toy hit him in the forehead.
Anderson was arraigned the same day on a charge of misdemeanor harassment and ultimately released.

On April 16, 2012, a U.S. Forest Service Officer came across something that most people only encounter in cartoons: booby traps.
The traps were located along a popular hiking trail in South Fork Canyon, Utah. They were elaborate set-ups, including concealed pits of spikes and a tripwire-activated swinging ball of spiked sticks surrounding a 20-pound rock. The officer found the traps before they claimed any victims, but hiker Emily Hammerstad noted that such traps "would kill people, easily."
Benjamin Rutkowski, 19, and Kai Christensen, 21, ultimately admitted to setting the traps, and were charged with reckless endangerment. Had anyone been hurt, they would have been charged with felonies.

Peter Andrew Levay, 42, is charged with beating his neighbor to death with an electric guitar.
On the morning of April 22, police in Austin, Texas were notified shortly after Levay allegedly told his roommate, Lavern Fisher, that he thought he killed the man who lived above them. Officials say they found the man, 64-year-old Maurice Leray Eckert, dead from "blunt trauma to the head." Eckert's wallet and blood-stained clothes were recovered from Levay's closet.
Fisher said his roommate's motive was likely related to the victim's conduct not long before the incident took place. The three men had been drinking together, Fisher said, when Eckert "started making sexual advances toward me and [Levay], and they became violent."

Investigators believe that Utah woman Angeles Cadillo-Castro used a spatula to murder her five-year-old stepdaughter. The young girl was found beaten to death in July 2010 in Cadillo-Castro's South Salt Lake apartment.
As part of a plea deal, the 31-year-old woman pleaded guilty and received a sentence of five years to life sentence in May 2011.
flickr: Andrew Mason

Roberto Vazquez's weapon of choice wouldn't be that unusual . . . if he were living in the Middle Ages.
Police say the 37-year-old New Jersey man attacked Matthew Pinto, an employee of Atlantic City Electric, with a "mace-like weapon" on February 8, 2012.
Vazquez had previously had his electricity disconnected after he failed to pay his bills, but he had managed to reconnect his power by cutting a lock and manipulating the meter. Pinto had arrived to disconnect the power once again when Vazquez allegedly beat the employee over the head with a weapon made up of a 16-inch wooden handle and two spiked metal spheres.
Pinto was knocked unconscious, and after waking up, bleeding from the head, in Vazquez's home, he drove to a police precinct to get help.
Vazquez now faces a range of charges including attempted murder, aggravated assault, tampering with evidence, obstruction of justice and weapons charges.

In April 2010, 16-year-old Daniel Kovarbasich was convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the killing of 55-year-old Duane Hurley.
Kovarbasich told the court that Hurley had sexually abused him for years, asking for sex in return for favors and gifts. On January 22, 2010 the Ohio teen snapped. He grabbed a nearby pickle jar and hit Hurley over the head with it, before stabbing him multiple times with a knife.
Kovarbasich was ultimately sentenced to 5 years of probation.